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in reply to Sam FM

SURE, it's not really right to say e.g. baking is a science whereas cooking is an art. Technically both are skills involving both instructions and intuitions, and neither is literally about doing science or creating art

HOWEVER!!

I think people do basically understand that "this is more art than science" means "this is more about intuition than being good at following straightforward instructions." Therefore: communication win

in reply to kip

My issue with the phrase is not that people are misunderstanding each other, but that the use of this phrase reinforces a frustrating characterization of "art" and "science" as sets of aesthetics and tools.

I think we lose a lot when we forget that the core value of science is to learn things by following the scientific method. Art has harder to define value, but I think it's a mistake to put so much emphasis on valuing how mysterious and inscrutable someone's creative process is.

in reply to Sam FM

So you're thinking that there's a relationship between people using the word "science" all willy-nilly and people misguidedly glamorizing science? ("I fucking love science", "scientists say X")

Or some other issue?

in reply to kip

in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

e.g. people go through high school and come away thinking that math is about learning algorithms, and so they're like "eh, I guess math is basically about following the rules the teacher told you. Mathematicians must multiply some really big numbers, I guess". Probably there have been at least some such people who would actually have loved "mathematician math", i.e. the process of discovering, understanding, and proving new mathematical truths.
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

Yess. And like, most disciplines involve some combination of technical study + intuition. So you get all these cutesy claims like, "jazz improv is *actually* more of a science" just because it involves studying technical music structure. The next step is to get confused and judge jazz improv by the merit of it's technical complexity.

Side note here: when I was in art school, my professors were actually very dismissive of building technical skills. This was very frustrating for me at the time, and probably an overcorrection. But I think they were trying to push back against a tide of technical-but-meaningless artworks, and re-center expression/communication/interpretation as the core of what it is to participate in art.

in reply to kip

@kip yeah I think the misguided glamorization is pretty core to this thing. Pages like IFL Science feel like the result of treating science like an aesthetic, or putting the people in science jobs on a weird platform.

I see a similar thing happening with "rationality," being used more often to refer to "certain Berkeley weirdos" than "careful truthseeking." It's not hard to imagine a IFL Rationality page that just reposts ideas from "certified rationalists" that you are now expected to believe with 100% confidence and no skepticism.

@kip
in reply to Sam FM

(side note: very amusing to try having a conversation with Sam through text in Ben's cool new internet living room. We were in the same room IRL and could've cleared things up extremely fast by speaking out loud)
in reply to Sam FM

I wonder if there's a setting or plugin to collapse comment threads. It's a little annoying that they can get super long, and take up all that space in the timeline.
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

Oh, wait, it seems like maybe that was the threshold for collapsing to start 😅
in reply to Sam FM

Yeah I'm trying to get a better sense of how content is structured here. It feels like a strange fb/twitter hybrid. The "posts with comments" structure feels like fb, but then the comments are treated almost like posts of their own sometimes. Scrolling through a list of "replies to various posts" feels more like Twitter